Implementing large-scale education assessments
In this issue...
Implementing
large-scale education
assessments
Prof Geoff Masters AO
is CEO of ACER.
4
International Developments
ACER is helping education researchers, policymakers and
practitioners understand the issues related to the inception,
design, implementation and reporting of large-scale education
assessments, as Geoff Masters explains.
A central question for governments
and school systems around the
world is what they can do to ensure
that all students are equipped with
the knowledge, skills and attributes
necessary for effective participation in
the future workforce and for productive
future citizenship.
To answer this question, countries
require quality information on current
levels of student achievement, the
performances of subgroups of the
student population − especially
socio-economically disadvantaged
students, Indigenous students and
new arrivals − and recent trends in
achievement levels within a country.
Large-scale education
assessments
It is also important to understand how
well a nation’s schools are performing
in comparison with schools elsewhere
in the world. Large-scale education
assessments enable education
policymakers, researchers and
practitioners to investigate whether:
•
some school systems are producing
better outcomes overall
•
some school systems have made
improvements in achievement levels
over time
•
some school systems are more
effective in ameliorating the influence
of socioeconomic disadvantage on
educational outcomes
•
some school systems do a better job
of developing the skills and attributes
required for life and work in the 21st
century.
Implementation of Large-Scale
Education Assessments, edited by
ACER’s Petra Lietz, John Cresswell and
Ray Adams, and Keith Rust from Westat
and the University of Maryland, has
been designed to support researchers,
policymakers and practitioners in
undertaking such investigations.
In the decades since the 1960s,
international comparative studies of
student achievement and the factors
underpinning differences in educational
performance in different countries have
evolved from a research interest of a
handful of academics and educational
research organisations to a major policy
tool of governments across the globe.
Monitoring progress and evaluating
effectiveness
International surveys now include the
OECD’s Programme for International
Student Assessment (PISA),
implemented in 75 countries in 2015,
and the IEA’s Trends in International
Mathematics and Science Study
(TIMSS), implemented in 59 countries
in 2015. Both are managed by ACER
in Australia. Other international surveys
are conducted in areas such as primary
school reading, civics and citizenship
and ICT literacy. Governments use the
results of these as well as significant
regional assessment programs, often
alongside results from their own
national surveys, to monitor progress
in improving quality and equity in
school education and to evaluate the
effectiveness of system‐wide policies
and programs.
Since the 1960s, there have also been
significant advances in methodologies
for the planning, implementation and
use of international surveys – in effect,
the evolution of a science of large‐scale
assessment. Implementation of LargeScale Education Assessments maps an
evolving methodology for large-scale
educational assessments. Progress in this
field has drawn on advances in specific
disciplines and areas of practice, including
psychometrics, test development,
statistics, sampling theory and the use of
new technologies of assessment.
The science of large-scale assessments
is continuing to evolve. The challenges
faced by the field include the need
to collect useful, internationally
comparable data on a broader range
of skills and attributes than have
typically been assessed in large‐scale
surveys. National education systems
and governments are increasingly
identifying skills and attributes such
as collaboration, innovativeness,
entrepreneurship and creativity
as important outcomes of school
education. The assessment of such
attributes may require very different
methods of observation and data
gathering, including by capitalising on
advances in assessment technologies.
An ongoing challenge will be to
ensure that the results of large‐scale
assessments continue to meet their
essential purpose: to inform and lead
effective educational policies and
practices to better prepare all students
for life and work in the 21st century.
In this issue
In this issue of International
Developments we investigate a
synthesis of research evidence that
identifies the impact of interventions that
offer high value in meeting education’s
greatest challenges in development
contexts. We explore how ACER’s
school assessments are playing a
part in supporting improvements in
teaching and learning, and we examine
the benefits of a program to collect
evidence of education quality for
governments, schools, communities
and students in the Pacific region.
This issue of International Developments
also looks at ACER’s work with
partners across South Asia to ensure
inclusive and quality education for
all, the development of a ‘road map’
for quality pre-primary education in
Indonesia, work in Timor Leste to
identify the impact of professional
learning and mentoring on students’
learning outcomes and efforts to
address educational gender disparities
in Malawi.
LINKS
For more information about
Implementation of Large-Scale
Education Assessments, visit https://
shop.acer.edu.au/implementation-oflarge-scale-education-assessments
For more information about PISA,
visit www.oecd.org/pisa and
www.acer.org/ozpisa
For more information about TIMSS,
visit http://timssandpirls.bc.edu and
www.acer.org/timss
International Developments
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